Wilkins, John, A discovery of a new world : or a discourse tending to prove, that 'tis probable there may be another Habitable World in the Moon ; with a discourse concerning the Probability of a Passage thither; unto which is added, a discourse concerning a New Planet, tending to prove, that 'tis probable our earth is one of the Planets

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[Item 1.]
[2.] Ex Libris James S. Dearden Rampside
[3.] A DISCOVERY OF A New , OR,
[4.] In Two Parts.
[5.] The Fifth Edition Corrected and Amended. LONDON,
[6.] The Epiſtle to the READER.
[7.] The Propoſitions that are proved in this Diſcourſe. PROPOSITION I.
[8.] PROP. II.
[9.] PROP. III.
[10.] PROP. IV.
[11.] PROP. V.
[12.] PROP. VI.
[13.] PROP. VII.
[14.] PROP. VIII.
[15.] PROP. IX.
[16.] PROP. X.
[17.] PROP. XI.
[18.] PROP. XII.
[19.] PROP. XIII.
[20.] PROP. XIV.
[21.] The Firſt Book. That the MOON May be a WORLD. The Firſt Propoſition, by way of Preface.
[22.] Sed vanus ſtolidis hæc omnia finxerit Error.
[23.] Solis lunæq; labores.
[24.] Cum fruſtra reſonant æra auxiliaria Lunæ.
[25.] Una laboranti poterit ſuccerrere Lunæ.
[26.] Gantus & è cælo poſſunt deducere Lunam.
[27.] Cantus & ſi curru lunam deducere tentant, Et facerent, ſi non æra repulſa ſonant.
[28.] PROP. II. That a Plurality of Worlds doth not contradict any Principle of Reaſon or Faith.
[29.] Æſtuas infelix auguſto limite mundi.
[30.] PROP. III. That the Heavens do not conſiſt of any ſuch pure Matter, which can priviledge them from the like Change and Corruption, as theſe Inferiour, Bodies are liable unto.
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135123That the Moon may be a World.
Unto this I may add another Teſtimony of
Bapt
.
Giſatus, as he is quoted by Nicrembergi-
us
, grounded upon an Obſervation taken 23
Years
after this of Mæſlin, and Writ to this
Euſeb
.
Nieremberg. in a Letter by that diligent
and
judicious Aſtronomer.
The Words of it
run
thus;
Et quidem in eclipſi nuper a ſolari quæ
11Hiſt. Nat.
l
. 2. c. II.
fuit ipſo de natali Ghriſti, obſervavi clari in luna
ſoli
ſuppoſita, quidpiam quod valde probat id ipſum
quod
Gometæ quoque &
maculæ ſolares urgent, nem-
pe
cælum non eſſe á tenuitate &
variationibus ae-
ris
exemptum;
nam circalunam adverti eſſe ſphæ-
ram
ſeu orbem quendam vaporoſum, non ſecus at-
que
circum terram, adeoque ſicut ex terra in ali-
quam
uſque ſphæram vapores &
exhalationes expi-
rant
, ita quoque ex luna.
‘In that late Solary
Eclipſe which happened on Chriſtmas Day,
when the Moon was juſt under the Sun, I
plainly diſcern’d that in her, which may clear-
ly confirm what the Comets and Suns Spots
do ſeem to prove, viz.
that the Heavens are
not ſolid, nor freed from thoſe Changes which
our Air is liable unto;
for, about the Moon
I perceiv’d ſuch an Orb, a vaporous Air, as
that is which doth encompaſs our Earth;
and
as Vapours and Exhalations are raiſed from
our Earth into this Air, ſo are they alſo from
the Moon.

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